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The Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth is a founding member of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) and hosted that province's inaugural assembly in June 2009. At the time of the vote in 2008 to separate from the Episcopal Church, the diocese had geographically fixed boundaries covering 24 counties in Texas and claimed 19,000 members. [ 2 ]
The reverend mother has denied the accusations. She oversaw a monastery of Carmelite nuns in Arlington.
The Carmelite nuns saw the Bishop as a friend until he ordered the dismissal of the reverend mother.
[10] The court's ruling also affirmed the ACNA diocese as the owner of the diocesan name and seal, and the Episcopal diocese renamed itself the Episcopal Church in North Texas. [11] Reed declared Pentecost Sunday 2020 to be a day of fasting and rededication in the Diocese of Fort Worth. [12]
St. Andrew's Anglican Church is a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Fort Worth in the Anglican Church in North America. Established as a mission church in 1875, it is the oldest continuous Episcopal/Anglican presence in Fort Worth. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, it played a role in the Anglican realignment in North America.
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Diocese/Jurisdiction Notes Leonard W. Riches: 1975 X RE Northeast and Mid-Atlantic: Retired as bishop ordinary, 2008. Presiding Bishop, Reformed Episcopal Church, 1996–2014. Deceased 2024. William C. Wantland: 1980 IV Eau Claire – Fort Worth (asst.). Retired. C. FitzSimons Allison: 1980 XII South Carolina (retired) Retired. Ronald Ferris: 1981